Eternal Warriors 4.0: Beating Boredom, Anxiety & Satan’s Lies with Passion Projects
Description
In this episode of the Memoirs of an LDS Servant Teacher Podcast, Maurice Harker (founder of Life Changing Services and creator of Eternal Warriors) helps you learn how to never be “spiritually bored” again—and how to fight back when Satan uses anxiety, depression, distraction, and “I’m just lazy” thinking to shut you down.
Maurice introduces key Eternal Warriors 4.0 principles, showing how passion projects—big, faith-based missions that matter to you—can become instant tools against feelings of worthlessness, boredom, and discouragement. Instead of just trying to “stop a bad habit,” you’ll learn how to aim your life at something powerful, and then build systems that help you actually follow through.
Using stories from his own life and work with Latter-day Saint individuals and couples, Maurice teaches:
The “war between remembering and forgetting” and why forgetting your goals is not a personal weakness, but a Satanic strategy
How to use reminder systems (alarms, 3x5 cards, written plans) as spiritual weapons, not crutches
The DAR cycle (Discover, Plan, Act, Reflect) and why planning specific times and places is like declaring war on Satan’s interference
How to plan for failure with backup plans and still move forward
The chemical scale and why moods (low motivation, “I’m just lazy,” “I’m broken”) are one of Satan’s favorite tools
How to catch Satan’s lies, write them down, and create truth-based rebuttals so he can’t reuse the same tricks
If you’re an LDS man or woman trying to rebuild your marriage, overcome addiction, or develop real self-mastery through the gospel of Jesus Christ, this episode will help you see your mind, your schedule, and your “forgetfulness” in a whole new spiritual light.
🔗 For deeper training and marriage repair tools, visit:
LifeChangingServices.org – Eternal Warriors, self-mastery, and faith-based therapeutic programs
This podcast is created by faithful members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but is not officially affiliated with the Church.























